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THE RISMARCK TRIBUNE, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 6, 1934 Cochrane Swit 3 IMPROVED DEMON GRIDIRON MACHINE DOWNS GLENDIVE, 12-0 | OUR BOARDING HOUSE GOSLIN MOVED UP TO FOURTH PLACE IN BATTING ORDER Greenburg Dropped to Sixth for Failure to Deliver Against Younger Dean ROGELL ALSO SHOVED UP Auker for Tigers and Carleton For St. Louis Probable Hurlers Saturday St. Louis, Oct. 6. — () — Mickey Cochrane hauled in the oxygen tank for his heart-sick Detroit Tigers Satur- tlay — administered baseball's last rites for a team in desperate condi- tion. He not only shook up his batting order, deposing giant Hank Green- burg. Bronx first baseman, from fourth place to sixth, substituting the sandy, hawk-nosed veteran, Goose Goslin, in the clean-up position, but he also planned to gamble on young Elden Auker to outpitch the Cardi- nals’ lanky Tex Carleton in the fourth game of the world series. Shortstop Bill Rogell moves up a peg to fifth in the line of batters, if he plays at all. Rogell, limping from ® strained left ankle suffered in the fourth inning of Thursday's game when he slid into second, was not Improved by a smashing collision with Pepper Martin in the seventh Friday. He made two errors after asking Cochrane for relief before the battle. There was a bare chance the brood- {ng Cochrane might make even more drastic changes before game time at 1:30 (CST). In 20 series limited to seven games, where the count at the end of the first three games stood 2 to 1, the leading club eventually won the title 18 times. Hopes Rest on Changes Every hope of ultimate victory ‘Mickey has for his Tigers, now trail- ing two games to one, rests in the mental stimulus of the return to the batting order he used most of the season in the drive to the. American ‘League pennant. But Greenburg, at the moment, is the hitting goat of the series. He woke up in the ninth inning of Fri- day's conflict, first of three games here as the battlefield shifted from Detroit, but his gesture, a ponderous triple to center with two out scoring Jo Jo White, who had singled, only “served to rob the second of the fan- tastic brothers Dean, Li Brother Paul, of a shutout, As it was, young brother Paul mere- ly hitched up his pants, heaved one Gown the middle that Rogell popped to Frankie Frisch for the final out, and trotted off the field with the screams of the pecked Missouri stands heralding his 4 to 1 victory. Twice before, in his first and second times at bat, Hank came up with men on bases, and failed to get the ball back as far as the pitching box. Greenburg Fails in Pinch Charlie Gehringer singled ahead of him with two out in the first and Greenburg fouled out. Then Coch- rane walked in the third with one out, Gehringer advanced the manager with a single to left, and Hank maloror- ously fanned in the clutch. Of course, Hank wasn’t alone in his discomfor- ture for Li'l Brother fanned six other fellows for a total of seven strikeouts, scattered six other hits one at a time though the first six innings, and aside from walking five, had no extraordi- nary difficulty. leaving 13 men stranded on base, one shy of the series record. His job was made considerably easier as the Cards pounced on Tom- my Bridges from the start, slapped him for eight hits in five innings, in- cluding a mighty triple and double by John Leonard “Pepper” Martin, a triple by Jack Rothrock and a double by | 40. Bill Delancey. They blew Tommy out of the pitching with none out in the fifth and two runs in. Elon Hogsett held the Cards to one hit the rest of the way. Martin walked in the seventh, hit Rogell so hard going into second that he broke up a possible double play by making the shortstop muff Gehring- er's toss on Rothrock’s grounder, and then decided to put on his old pilfer- Ing act and steal third. He set sail, ‘but the ball beat Pepper there, Owen put it on him in a cloud of dust, and ‘he wild horse trotted away scowling, Jassoo figuratively dangling from is neck. ‘The probable starting lineup: Detroit (A) St. Louis (N) White, cf Martin, 3b “ Cochrane,c Rothrock, rf Gehringer, 2b Frisch, 2b Goslin, If Medwick. If Rogell, ss Collins, 1b Greenburg, 1b Delancey, ¢ Orsatti, cf Fox, rf Durocher, ss Auker, p Carleton, p Umpires: Reardon (N), plate; Owen (A), first base; Klem (N), second; Geisel (A), third. Youthful Californian, Titlist in Golf Finals Philadelphia, Oct. 6—(#)—Either California is going to obtain a three- ply monopoly cn the major American Against the two-time champion in the 36-hole final of the 38th national tournament was 20-year-old Doroth: Traung of San Francisco, an 170- pound youngster with merry brown ‘Miss Traung can duplicate of William Lawson Lit- won both the +] Oppost pitcher will be Chet Brewer, Switche s Lineup After Cards Win Third Game of Series YES —IM PAYING $20 A WEEK TO SWING IN THIS CAGE,TH'SAME AS You APES! —~T GOT TO TH B FIRST, AN’ T AIN'T SWITCHIN’ ) CLAIM ON TH’ TO A SIDING To LET TH’ LIMITED HAVE TH RIGHT OF WAY-~~\F THATS WHAT YOU GUYS MEAN, BATHROOM - Na TUB /——BE OUT 2 OF TH WATER IN 1? START 10 MINUTES-YOU ) CLAPPING 15) AINT A FOUNTAIN : STATUE! SQUATTERS SOME FISH WHEN YOU et. American League All-Stars Arrive For Game With Picked State Team Tad Lyons of white Sox and! STEVE HAMAS UNIMPRESSIVE IN 10-ROUND DECISION OVER LASKY Chet Brewer of Monarchs Are Probable Pitchers Earl Mack's heavy hitting Ameri- can League All-Stars, featuring Pinkey Higgins and Jimmy Foxx of the Phil- adelphia Athletics and Heinie Manush oi the Washington Senators arrived in the Capital City Saturday for the long-awaited clash with a combined club from four semi-professional North Dakota teams. The “big leaguers” began their in- vasion of the northwest at Minne- apolis against the Millers of the Am- erican Association, going down to de- feat in a close game by @ score of Playing their first game in North Dakota, the barnstorming nine easily defeated a picked group of Northern League stars at Grand Forks and then moved on to Valley City where they crossed bats with virtually the same team that will oppose them in Bismarck. Either Earl Whitehill, Senator left- hander, or Mylie Thomas of the Sen- ators is expected to take up the slab duties in the Saturday game. ing the American League ace moundsman of the Kansas City Monarchs. Probable starting lineups for Sat- urday’s game: All-Stars Cramer, 1b Hopkins, ss Sewell, c Manush, If Higgins, 3b Campbell, cf Kress, 2b Moss, rf Whitehill, p | Football Scores | ———————_*e (By The Associated Press) Duluth Junior 0; Virginia Junior 7. ‘Waukon College 0; Rochester Junior All-State Foster, 2b Luther, ss. ‘Wessels, rf Davis, 1b Radcliffe, p Augustana (Sioux Falls) 47; West- ern Union 0. Milwaukee Teachers 18; Platteville Teachers 13. Fae Thomas 0; North Dakota State Jamestown College 27; Manitoba Unjversity 0. en Northern Normal 6; Rapid City School of Mines 7. a Picked State Team Beats All-Stars, 6-5 Valley City, N. D., Oct. 6—(P)}— Valley City’s baseball team, aug- mented by Jamestown and Bis- marck players, defeated Earl Mack’s American League All-Stars here Friday, 6-5. Valley City hammered Ted Lyons, Chicago White Sox hurler, for 11 hits to collect its six runs in the first five innings. Jimmy Foxx, Philadelphia first baseman, who next season will be the team’s catcher, pitched no-hit ball in the final three innings. Brown, Jamestown negro hurler, started the game for Valley City, allowing only three hits in five innings, which accounted for two runs for the visitors. Brewer, for- merly with the Kansas City Mon- archs, hurled the remaining four frames and allowed four hits. Baseball Tourney to Be Played at Beulah Beulah, N. D., Oct. 6—The four county tournament between teams from Morton, Oliver, Mercer and Dunn counties will be held at Beulah Sunday. The various county organizations have had two weeks in which to select their players and the tournament. should be the scene of some good baseball. Mercer county will feature Miss Dorothy Nead, a girl athlete, who bats, throws and plays the game gen- erally as well as any boy. Players from Killdeer, Dunn Cen- ter, Werner, Halliday, and Dodge will represent Dunn county. Oliver county will have Center and Rhine as their main offering and Gathering from other parts of the county presenting a real threat. Morton county has the largest ter- ritory to draw from and are favored to take the tournament. Mercer county, although short on EAvEts, sil have. strong: line ;tp.of The drawings will be made at 10:30 ®, m., Sunday and the first game will start at 11:00 a. m. OUT OUR WAY Nas Wi AAA : D a Vv THERGS ONE TIME A GUY DON'T GIT NO FEATHER IN HIS BONNET FER SEIN’ WIDE AWAKE — THE utr THAT GUY WASTIN' ELECTRIC DAYTIMS, nar wh 4 BIG GoSs DIDN'T, LE BOSS NOTICED IS GOLDEN Minneapolis Boy Metes Out Ter- tific Punishment in Third Round But Loses New York, Oct. 6.—()—Your heavy- weight champion of the world, care- free Maxie Baer, can dance the reel- ing midnight through for the next nine months and have nothing much to fear from young Steve Hamas, the Passaic, N. J., boy, who stood half a head smaller than big Art Lasky here) Friday night and punched out a de- cision in 10 rounds. In the history of this great amphi- theater, there never was a 23-year-old boy who stood up and fought with such heart as young Hamas did in this struggle with Lasky. He ‘gave ‘away seven pounds and two precious inches in reach, yet he stood up after a terrific thrashing in the third round, and came back to win, though he was out on his feet at the end. ‘The judges disagreed. Joe Agnello| gave Hamas six rounds to four for’ Lasky, and Harold Barnes gave them five apiece, but Barnes voted for Lasky because of his courageous finish. Ref- eree Billy Kavanaugh settled the dis- pute by giving Hamas five, Lasky four and calling one even. In the fourth round, during one of the few tame minutes of the batile, Lasky cuffed Hamas with a back- hand, pivot blow that cost him the battle. There was no reason for the punch. It did not even strike Hamas with any real force, but though Lasky carried the rest of the round, Kav- anaugh instructed the judges at the end of the round that it should be given to Hamas. t Fights Last Night | New York-Steve Hames 101%, Lasky, pointed John (Corn) Griffin, 187%, Columbus, Ga., (6); Lou Poster, 189, Pottstown, Pa., out- ‘NOW, IF TH! IS REALLY A BIG Guy, HE'D APPRECIATE HIS OVERSIGHT BEIN’ CA TO HIS ATTENTION, BUT, IF TH! LITTLE BOSS HAS GOT ANY BIG STUFF] } 1N HIM, HE WON'T DO pointed Al Boros, 195, Bridgeport, Conn., (6). Pisimo Beach, Calf. — Sammy Lavine, 130, St. Paul, outpointed Jose Paradiso, 126, Manila, (6). By Williams BIG BOSS LLED IT, FIGGER THAT TRWiLLIAMS © 1904 evince semace mc IO-lo ELOFSON STARS AS. LOCALS TRIUMPH IN | HARD-FOUGHT. TILT Two Marches Down Field Score Touchdowns in First and Third Periods LINE SHOWS IMPROVEMENT ‘Third Drive Ended by Whistle With Only Four Yards to Go for Counter A well-oiled and nicely balanced Demon gridiron machine. fought its way to a hard-earned 12 to 0 triumph over a willing but outclassed Glen- dive, Mont., eleven under the flood- lights of Eughes field Friday night. Culminating two steady marches down the field with touchdowns in the first and third quarters and well on their way to a third when the final whistle blew, the Demons ex- hibited a vastly improved running attack that clicked with smooth pre- cision and reeled off steady gains through the line and off tackle. Only on rare occasions were the Montana backs able to break away from the fast-charging Demon line- men and in those instances they were usually hauled down before they had traversed many yards toward the goal line. Bismarck started their first touch- down drive following an exchange of punts after the opening kickoff. {Backed near their own goal Glendive ikicked to Elofson onthe 30-yard stripe and he raced the ball back to the 10-yard line before he was downed. Schultz picked up two yards through the line and Shafer, on a re- verse over guard, went the remaining eight yards for the touchdown. Score on Passes ‘Two completed passes, Elofson to Schultz and Flofson to Sorsdahl gave the Demons their second counter after a bad Glendive punt had put Bismarck in a scoring position. Elofson was th> outstanding per- former in the Demon backfield. He reeled off consistent gains outside the Glendive tackles, returned punts for additional yardage and tossed three passes into the waiting arms of his teammates. Sorsdahl and Shafer also turned in fine games. In the Bismarck line, Lips, Woodland and Whittey were standout players, though every member of the Demon forward wall showed remarkable improvement over last week. L. Berg, midget left halfback for the visitors and- Andrews, quarterback, bore the brunt of the Glendive of- fensive. Bismarck won the toss and chose to defend the west goal. Woodland kicked to the 20-yard line and the ball was returned to the 30-yard stripe. Two downs failed to gain and after a penalty Glendive punted to Elofson who returned the ball to the 35-yard line. Schultz gained’ five yards and Sorsdahl added 10 more. Held to no gain Sorsdah! punted and the ball was returned to the 32-yard line. Fumble Costly to Visitors Glendive fumbled on the second play and Bismarck recovered on the 36-yard line. A 15-yard penalty was given the Demons. Sorsdah! punted IN. D. State Beats SECTIONAL BATTLES STAND OUT St. Thomas, 27-0| IN SATURDAY’S GRID SCHEDULE Bison Rip Through Tommy De- fense to Score Four Touch- downs Friday Fargo, Oct. 6.—(#)—Flashing a fast and powerful offense behind a strong, battering line, the North Dakota ricultural college football team, whipped less than a week ago by Minnesota 56-12, came back night to grind out a 27-0 victory over the St. Thomas college eleven of St. Paul. The Bison ripped through the Tommy defense in the last three quarters to score four touchdowns. Fritz Hanson, brilliant Bison touch- down runner, sped through the Tom- my line for a series of gains early in the second quarter and finally sliced through from the four-yard line for a touchdown. A pass, Leo Gerteis to Sam Dober- vich, who caught the ball after it had bounced from Forrest Stevens’ ee put the ball on the 19-yard ine, five-yard stripe, and Bob carried it over. In the third period, Les Dohn, sophomore from Bismarck, his first game in the Bison. lineup, paved the way for another touch- down, returning a punt 20 yards to the Tommy 35. Then ® pass, Ger- teis to Dohn, brought the ball within four yards of the goal. Gerteis took it over for the touchdown. The final score came in the last Period on a pass, Gerteis to Bud Marquardt, for a nine-yard gain. Big Lyle Sturgeon, Herb Peschel, Leonard House and others constantly smeared the Tommy runners. &. Thomas had no better luck at pass- ing, as the Bison secondary knocked rad or intercepted every opposing aerial. The Bison rolled up 15 first_downs, while the Tommies had two, with penalties figuring in both. ‘8t. Thomas OBrien ... McGuire .. O'Laughlin Cogley .. Zucco .. Sunby .. Rigney Haider Higgins . Feeley the second to Sorsdahl for the touch- down. An attempted line smash for the extra point was short. Glendive Threatens ‘Woodland’s kickoff was taken by Grulke, Glendive substitute, on the) 50-yard line. Berg, Colbrese and Andrews alternated carrying the ball and Glendive made @ first down on the 3i-yard line. Interference with the receiver gave them another first down on the 20-yard line. Berg raced around end for eight yards and Mc- Lean made it a first down through the line. Here the Demon forward wall stiffened and four thrusts at the line netted a two-yard loss. Bismarck took the ball. Sorsdahl punted and the ball was downed on the Bismarck 29-yard line. Glendive made another first down on two plays as the third quarter ended. Glendive took to the air in the last period but an intercepted pass gave the Demons the ball on their own 37-yard line. Shafer picked up three Elofson raced around end again and the bell was downed on|{ the Glendive four-yard stripe. The visitors punted on first down and Elofson returned it 20 yards to the 10-yard line where Shafer carried it over for a touchdown on the second play. Sorsdahl’s kick for the extra point was short. ¢ Glendive chose to receive and ‘Woodland kicked. Each team failed to make ® first down and Sorsdahl, with the wind at his back, drove the Glendive team nearer their own goal as the quarter ended. Sorsdahl slashed off tackle for 12 yards as the second quarter opened and Shafer took the ball on the 42- yard line and carried it to the 16. yard mark before he was brought down. Two thrusts at the line net- ted six yards but a penalty was im- posed and Sorsdah! attempted a field goal which was short. Glendive put the ball stripe and the two teams battled in Glendive territory until the first half ended. Woodland kicked off for Bismarck ‘and the Glendive receiver was brought down by Brandenburg on the 20-yard line. Glendive punted on the second down and the Demons began their second march to a touchdown. Schultz gained seven yards in three tries and Wenaas made it @ first down. Sorsdahl carried it inside the 10-yard line but « 15-yard penalty was im- |. Elofson tossed two passes, the in play on the 20-yard | Ui two short gains, Glendive intercepted ® Bismarck pass and returned the ball to the 35-yard marker. Bismarck got the ball at midfield 5 ; F ‘ E i i 3 ERPEE il ff se ‘Whitt Davis . Sorsdahl Elofson G. Snafer Rei gaa be Bchults ... Substitutions: Bismarck—Perty, Wenass, Brandenburg, Neff. Glendive—Grulke, Danskiv, T. Pelzer, A. Colbrese, Wall gained from scrimmage: Glendive, 68. posed. first to Shultz for eight yards and ~ POWERY, OFEL Club Breakfasts 25c and 35¢_ Noonday Luncheons 35c and 40c Chef's Special Evening Dinner 50c POWERS COFFEE SHOP Hanson broke through to the) Erickson Gophers Oppose Nebraska Eleven Minnesota Anticipates Little Trouble from Last Year's Big Six Champions Minneapolis, Oct. 6.—(#)—Seeking a second straight win this season to add to last year’s undefeated record, Min- nesota tackled Nebraska Saturday in an _intersectional football contest. Rated the favorite, the Gophers nevertheless were ready for strenuous Opposition from last year’s big six champions, winners in of all their games save one. Indications from the one-sided vic- tories scored by the teams in opening games last week were the Cornhusk- ers would make good use of a varied aerial attack, while the Gophers would rely mainly, on a powerhouse attack which rolled over North Dakota for eight touchdowns. Two new regulars were scheduled to be in Minnesota’s starting lineup—Ed ‘Widseth, sophomore, at tackle in place of the veteran Dick Smith, and Stan Kostka, fullback, who scored half his ae opening Leste touchdowns. Kostka’s presence was brought about through a knee injury which incapac- itated Sheldon Beise, regular fullback. The absence of Jerry Lanoue, fast Cornhusker back, recently injured, hurt the visitors’ chances, but they had Henry Bauer, quarterback who was missing in their opener, to help balance the loss. ‘The lineups: Nebraska Scherer Plum Heldt Meier White Reese Yelkin Minnesota Tenner ‘Widseth Oech Rennebohm Pos. | Bauer Benson Cardwell Francis Referee, Fred Gardner, Cornell; umpire, H. G. » Dartmouth; field judge I. Carrithers, Illinois; head linesman, 8. Taylor, Wichita. GRAND FORKS ELEVEN DEFEATS GRAFTON, 6-2 Grafton, N. D., Oct. 6—(#)—Grand Forks high school stopped Grafton’s powerful eleven, 6-2, in a sensational gridiron battle here Friday, shoving over a touchdown in the opening min- utes of the contest and standing off the Spoilers’ determined scoring drives. Yale and Columbia Meet First Time in 27 Years; Temple Owls Swamp Texas New York, Oct, 6—(#)—Yale op Columbia? California or St. Mary's? Towa or Northwestern? Georgia Tech or Vanderbilt? Minnesota or Ne- braska? These were the burning questions of the day as the nation’s football fang Prepared to swarm into stadia from one coast to the other in pursuit of their favorite outdoor pastime. Yale and Columbia, meeting at New Haven for the first time in 29 years, dominated the eastern program. Although it had nothing whatever to do with the Pacific coast confer- ence race, California’s tussle with Slip Madigan’s St. Mary Gaels was a standout on the far western slate despite such other encounters as Southern California and Washington State, Stanford and Oregon State. Two highly-touted big ten arrays were involved in the collision of Iowa and Northwestern at Evanston but middle western interest likewise was stirred by Minnesota’s joust with Ne- braska of the big six; the western con ference game between Indiana and Ohio State; Purdue's intersectional battle with Rice; Notre Dame's debut against Texas; Wisconsin's set-to with Marquette and the champion Michi- , gan Wolverines’ inaugural with Michi- gan State. Southern critics expected consider- able light on potential champions or . near-champions to be shed in such games as those between Vanderbilt and Georgia Tech; Tulane and Au- burn; North Carolina and Tennesse: to mention a few. Louisiana State’ Tigers clashed with Southern Meth- odist of the southwest conference. Featuring the eastern card along with» Yale and Columbia were the meetings between Pitt and West Vir- ginia; Army and Davidson, Navy and Virginia, Manhattan and Kansas State and Villanova and Western Maryland. Friday night's schedule was marked by an impressive show of power by Pop Warner's Temple Owls wha swamped Texas A. & M., 40-6. Duquesne ran up a record 99-0 score on_ Ashland. f Denver and George Washington Played to a scoreless tie in Denver; Oklahoma A. & M. nosed out Drake, 7-0; Detroit beat Western (Mich.) State Teachers, 25-7, and Mississippi State dropped @ 7-6 decision to Mille , MINNEAPOLIS. A strictly fireproof, modern Hotel within a short walk of Shopping, Amusement, Financial and Wholesale Centers. . . . You'll appreciate the friendly hospitality, the reasonable room rates and the moderately priced Restaurants. ‘W. B. 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